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Readings in NonViolent Action (Francis of Assisi) / More experts ready.

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Date: Tue Dec 04 2001 - 13:15:51 EST


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Good People,

This message contains information on:

1. Readings in NonViolent Action - St. Francis of Assisi
2. More experts - willing to testify before Congress
3. Legislative Action - in your state.


1. Readings in NonViolent Action - St. Francis of Assisi
--------------------------------------------------------
This is the fourth in our Series (for the web version see,
http://www.AKidsRight.Org/civil_back.htm).  It has a "lively"
text, we'd like to say it's an exageration of what Francis would
have said and done -- but it is very true.
             
For most modern people, St. Francis brings to mind an "animal lover"
(he is always depicted with a bird on his shoulder).  As was said
about Thoreau, this can be said much more so for Francis, "an example
of the practicability of virtue, the deep-rooted individual who has
the power to awaken his neighbors from their torpid lives of
expediency to lives of principle."  He is a powerful reminder that
Faith in a Loving God must be at the core of anyone hoping to practice
NonViolent Action.  Below we will see how he surmounted the same
hurdles blocking modernday parents from action: lack of love, loss of
money, dependency on intellect, desire for violence.

For those of you who may be unfamiliar with his history.  Francis was
born in the early Middle Ages to a well-to-do family. It was a violent
time, local cities warred on each other for "pride" and it appeared
everyone was chasing wealth and power.  He felt himself called to take
on a monumental task, the renewal of Christian ideals within the
people. He did it, not by trying to control their behavior, but by
changing his own.  Many people seeking reform become depressed by the
size of the problem. "How can my little sacrifice make a difference?"
Francis reminds us that when we act with Love & Faith, there is always
a good effect.  Certainly on ourselves -- and that should be
enough. Will it be enough to change the others & the world -- that is
beyond our control.  As Gandhi would also say, when we become too
concerned about "results", we lose the power to act with conviction.

His was an example of humility and poverty.  He renounced all he owned
and was quite willing to suffer and make a fool of himself to convert
his listeners. The excerpts below are not from a biography, but from a
novel based on his life (for a scholarly work on his life, see our
bibliography).  The incidents described may seem fantastic, but they
are consistent with his actual life and methods -- he was truly
unique.  God's "little buffoon" caused many 'doctored' and
'propertied' people to give away all they had in pursuit of real joy.

-----------------------------------------------------------------

>From the preface by Nikos Kazantzakis (author of "Zorba the Greek")

Everywhere about me, as I wrote, I sensed the Saint's invisible
presence; because for me Saint Francis is the model of the dutiful
man, the man who by means of ceaseless, supremely cruel struggle
succeeds in fulfilling our highest obligation, something higher even
than morality, truth, or beauty: the obligation to transubstantiate
the matter which God entrusted to us, and turn it into spirit.

-----------------------------------------------------------------

                     Preaching the 'new madness'

Francis was visible at the edge of the square, hopping, dancing, his
robe was tucked up. "Come one, come all!" he was calling. "Come,
brothers to hear the new madness!"

Behind him ran a hoard of laughing children, chasing him and throwing
stones . . . He, calm and laughing, turned from time to time, held out
his arms to the children, and shouted, "Whoever throws one stone at
me, may he be once blessed by God; whoever throws two stones at me,
may he be twice blessed by God; whoever throws three stones at me, may
he be thrice blessed by God" -- whereupon a continuous stream of
stones rained down upon him.

Blood was flowing now from his forehead and chin . . . He was jumping
and dancing rapturously, all covered with blood. "Hear, brothers," he
sang, "hear the new madness!" . . .

"Tell us, tell us, tell us!" came from every side, accompanied by a
chorus of guffaws.

Francis mounted the steps of the temple, opened his arms to the
jeering crowd and screamed: "Love! Love! Love!" Then he began to run
from one end of the square to the other, jumping, dancing, shouting
. . .

"Peace be unto you!" he said to each person who approached. "Peace be
unto you!" When a great number had assembled and the square was full
he spread his arms. "Peace," he shouted, "peace be unto your hearts,
your houses, your enemies. Peace be to the world! The kingdom of
heaven is at hand!"

--------------------------------------------------------------------

                       Can you Sacrifice Wealth?

. . . a merchant named Bernard of Qunitavalle came up to Francis. He
dealt in cloth just as Sior Bernardone [Francis' Father] did . . . He
had heard about Francis, and had laughed at first, thinking that all
this fixing of churches, kissing of lepers, undressing in public and
returning the clothes he was wearing to his father was but a new
series of pranks on the part of Bernardone's pampered son.  And now
here he was holding a bell and making the rounds of the streets
preaching, as he said, a new madness.  Bernard was unable to
understand exactly what the "new madness" was . . . Could it be that
God was truly giving him the strength to resist hunger, nakedness, and
scorn? . . .

"A thought has been tormenting me, Sior Francis," he said. "Take pity
on me and sooth my heart."

Francis clasped Bernard's hand and made him stand up. "I am listening,
Brother Bernard. Not I, but God, will soothe your heart. Tell me your
troubles."

"A great nobleman gave me a large treasure to keep for him. I have
guarded it for many years, but now I plan to go on a long, dangerous
journey. What should I do with this treasure?"

"You should return it to the man who entrusted it to you, Brother
Bernard. Who is this great nobleman?"

"Christ. All my wealth I owe to him: it is His. How then can I return
it to him?"

. . . As soon as we reached the Piazza San Giorgio, Bernard inserted
his key and opened his shop. Standing on the threshold, he cried:
"Whoever is poor, whoever is unclothed -- come!  In the name of
Christ, I am distributing all my goods."

. . . How the people ran! Women, girls, old men, ragamuffins: how
their eyes shown, how avidly they stretched forth their hands in the
Sunday air!  And Bernard, laughing, enjoying himself, joked happily
with this one, teased that one, while with the large pair of shears he
held in his hand he cut the cloth and distributed his wealth.

>From time to time Francis turned to him. Bernard would sigh: "What joy
this is, Brother Francis! What a relief!"

Father Silvester happened to pass by. The sight of Bernard pillaging
and scattering his possessions made the priest's heart break in
two. "What a shame such wealth should go to waste!" he
murmured. . . . He stopped and watched, shaking his head. Francis
divined what he was thinking.

"Father Silvester, you remember what Christ says, don't you? Forgive
me if I remind you. 'If you want to be perfect, distribute your
possessions to the poor, and you shall earn a great treasure in
heaven.' So, why are you shaking your head?"

Father Silvester coughed, turned fiery red, and went on his way.
Francis felt distressed at having hurt him. "Father Silvester, Father
Silvester!" he shouted.  The priest turned.  "I reminded you of
Christ's words. Forgive me. You, the priest of God, know them better
than I, the sinner."

If Francis had been closer, he would have been able to see two tears
well up in the priest's eyes.

---------------------------------------------------------------

                    Can you Sacrifice Intellect?

Sior Pietro was a celebrated professor of law at the University of
Bologna . . . he had left Bologna because of the death of his most
beloved student a few days before. He had been unable to restrain
himself with sorrow, and had enclosed himself in his paternal home,
refusing to see anyone . . . studying long hours into the night had
eaten away at his cheeks, and his entire face was as dry and yellow as
the expensive parchment used by monks to record Christ's Passion.

"Forgive me," he said, "if I start from the beginning. I had a student
named Guido whom I loved like my own son . . . At the age of twenty he
had the good sense and erudition of an old man. And mixed with this
brilliant mind was something which is found very seldom: passion,
flaming passion. . . . A few days ago he died."

He squeezed his lips together to hold back the rising sob . . . "On
the day of his final agonies I bent over his pillow and said to him,
"Guido, my child, if God decides to call you near Him . . . I want you
to visit me one night in my dreams and tell me what goes on in the
other world."

. . . Sior Pietro's voice broke and he was forced to stop
again. Finally he managed to continue: "He came. Today at dawn
. . . He was dressed in a strange kind of robe. No, it wasn't a robe,
it was hundred of strips of paper sewn together around his body--all
the manuscripts he had written during the course of his studies, and
on them were all the problems, questions, the philosphic and legal
perplexities, the theological concerns . . . He was so weighted down
with papers, try as he might he could not walk. 'Guildo, my child,' I
shouted at him, 'what are these . . . scraps that are preventing you
from walking?'

'I've just come from the Inferno,' he answered me, 'and I am
struggling to climb to Purgatory. But I can't. These scraps of paper
are preventing me . . . '"

Sior Pietro got up. "Everything is finished now," he said. "Before
coming here I threw all my manuscripts into the fire and burned
them--all my manuscripts, all my books. I am saved . . . A new life is
beginning for me, glory be to God!"

----------------------------------------------------------------------

                         Can you Sacrifice Violence?

"My name is Francis of Assisi. I'm also called God's sweet little
pauper, and also His buffoon . . ."

"I am a monk from Spain. I've come from the ends of the earth to
obtain the pope's permission to found an order which will make war
against heretics and infidels. My name is Domenic."

"I too asked the pope for permission to found an order and also to
preach."

"To preach what , Brother Francis?"

"Perfect Poverty and perfect Love."

"And aren't you going to light wood in the middle of every village to
burn all heretics, sinners, and infidels?"

Francis shuddered. "No,no," he protested. "I am not going to kill sin
by killing sinners; I am not going to wage war against evil doers and
infidels. I shall preach love, and I shall love; I shall preach
concord, and shall practice brotherly love toward everyone in the
world . . . "

"Human nature is evil---evil, cunning, demonic," the wearer of the
white robe exclaimed angrily. "The gentleness you talk about is not
enough; what's needed is force. If the body gets in the way, you must
obliterate it so that the soul may be saved.  I shall burn wood in
Spain, and the souls there shall abandon their bodies below on earth
in the form of ashes, and mount to heaven."

"Love!"

"Force!"

"Mercy!"

"Brother Francis, life is not a promenade where couples walk arm in
arm singing songs of love. Life is war, toil, violence! . . . Dig a
well if you want a drink of water; strike evildoers squarely on the
head if you expect to do away with evil . . . Do not look at me in
terror, poor sweet little monk. Scripture itself says the same: 'Men
of violence have taken the Kingdom of heaven by force.'"

Francis sighed. "I didn't know violence was also from God. You have
broadened by mind; my heart, however, resists and cries, 'Love! Love!'
But who knows: perhaps our antithetical roads may come together and we
may suddenly meet each other in the course of our ascent to the
Almighty."

"So please it God," the stranger replied. "But I am afraid you are a
lamb fallen among men -- amoung wolves. They shall eat you before you
reach the goal of the ascent. Forgive me if I tell you in all
frankness what is on my mind: You know all about love, but that is not
enough. You must also learn that hate comes from God as well, that it
too is in the Lord's service. And in times like these, with the world
fallen to the state it has, hate serves God more than love." . . . He
rose in order to leave.

"Farewell, Brother Domenic. Lions and lambs, love and force, light and
fire, good and evil: all things, I want you to know, climb the same
mountain, the mountain of God -- only they do not know it. Hate does
not know it, that's certain; love does know it, that's equally certain
. . . I am revealing to you the happy secret: one day all shall join
together at the summit where God stands with outstretched arms."

   
2. More experts - willing to testify before Congress
----------------------------------------------------
John Murtari had contact with a few more people who are ready to help
by their willingness to testify before Congress regarding the need for
reform in our Family Law system.  For the complete list see
http://www.AKidsRight.Org/legislative_resources.htm  Right now the
least is entirely male, we welcome participation by all genders. See
the link for details.

* Dr. Warren Farrell (California) - A psychologist and prolific author
on gender/family issues.  He has several best sellers and
Book-of-the-Month Club selections. He has served on the boards of four
national men's and fathers' organizations and was also the only man in the
US to ever have been elected three times to the Board of Directors of
the National Organization for Women (NOW). He has also appeared eight
times on Donahue, and repeatedly on the Oprah Winfrey Show, as well as
on the ABC World News with Peter Jennings, the Today Show with Barbara
Walters, 20/20, Crossfire, and Larry King Live.For more about him
check, http://www.warrenfarrell.com/bio.htm

* Professor Stephen Baskerville (Virginia) - a professor of political
science at Howard University in Washington. He was formerly chairman
of the Department of Politics at Palacky University in the Czech
Republic (former Czechoslovakia). He is the author of numerous articles
and book reviews on fatherhood and the politics of the family. His
work has appeared in the Women's Quarterly, Washington Post,
Washington Times, Insight magazine, the American Spectator, Catholic
World Report, and the Sunday Independent (UK).


3. Legislative Action - in your state.
-------------------------------------
Our goal is to find a Congressional sponsor for reform. Someone who
will start the process by calling for Congressional Hearings into the
need for National Reform of the system.  To find out what is happening
(and to make a contribution), check
http://www.AKidsRight.Org/legislat.htm


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